Porterville Recorder

3-plus months after Maria, barely half of Puerto Rico has power

- By DANICA COTO

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Puerto Rico authoritie­s said Friday that nearly half of power customers in the U.S. territory still lack electricit­y more than three months after Hurricane Maria.

Officials said 55 percent of the nearly 1.5 million customers have power, marking the first time the government has provided that statistic since the Category 4 storm hit on Sept. 20 with winds of up to 154 mph. Officials had previously reported power generation, which stands at nearly 70 percent of pre-storm levels.

“The damage was severe,” power company spokesman Geraldo Quinones told The Associated Press. “A lot of work remains.”

One of Puerto Rico 78 municipali­ties remains entirely without power, and it’s unclear when some electricit­y will be restored to the central mountain town of Ciales. Crews this week restored power for the first time to parts of the southeast coastal town of Yabucoa, which received the first hit from Maria.

Among those still in the dark is Eileen Cheverez, a 48-year-old respirator­y therapist who lives in Morovis, which borders Ciales. She said power was restored to homes around her, but that crews still need to set up a key cable so she can have lights.

“This truly consumes you mentally, emotionall­y,” she said, adding that seeing homes lit up around her gives her some hope amid the frustratio­n. “It’s like a lack of respect. I know the damage was great, especially in the mountains, but I feel they’ve taken too long.”

Quinones said power remains out across the island equally, although he wasn’t able to immediatel­y say what percentage of businesses and homes now have electricit­y.

Gov. Ricardo Rossello had pledged 95 percent power generation by Dec. 15, while the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has said the entire island will have power by May.

Fredyson Martinez, vice president of a union that represents workers with Puerto Rico’s power company, told the AP on Friday that a recent study by local engineers found that 90 percent of industries and 75 percent of businesses already have power, meaning residentia­l areas are disproport­ionately in the dark.

Martinez said the company should have provided the number of customers without power a while ago. The company has said the optical fiber that helps provide that data was destroyed by the hurricane, but Martinez said officials had other ways of obtaining the informatio­n.

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